Yuh-shin Jiang Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 811 Tucker Rd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-9232 |
Dr. Harrison Liu, PHARM.D. Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 24900 Highway 202, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-4402 |
Eman Younan Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 811 Tucker Rd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-9232 |
Shady Yassa Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 811 Tucker Rd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-9232 |
Dr. Ronde Snell, PHARMD Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: End Of Hwy 202, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-4402 |
Carl Satton Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 24900 Valley Boulevard, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-4402 Fax: 661-823-3354 |
Basem Boraie Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 775 Tucker Rd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-823-7094 Fax: 661-823-7096 |
Samra Saeed, B-PHARM Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 1101 W Tehachapi Blvd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-823-0163 Fax: 661-823-0742 |
Mrs. Hester Maria Botha, RPH Pharmacist Medicare: Not Enrolled in Medicare Practice Location: 811 Tucker Rd, Tehachapi, CA 93561 Phone: 661-822-9232 Fax: 661-822-1838 |
News Archive
Building on decades of research into how the body's electrical field affects skin regeneration, scientists at Johnson & Johnson Consumer Companies, Inc., have discovered how to harness the power of bioelectricity to help improve skin rejuvenation. The new innovation, called CYTOMIMICâ„¢ Technology, is a proprietary, patented technology that combines essential minerals to deliver biological levels of electric signals similar to the skin's natural bioelectricity.
Before surgeon Emily Penman, M.D., begins a mastectomy or lumpectomy, her lightly sedated patient receives a nerve block, an injection of medicine to control pain after surgery.
Studying the role of social stigma in depression for lung cancer patients, researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Fla., have found that depression can be heightened by a lung cancer patient's sense of social rejection, internalized shame and social isolation. These factors may contribute to depression at rates higher than experienced by patients with other kinds of cancer.
Researchers from MIT and Massachusetts General Hospital have developed a predictive model that could guide clinicians in deciding when to give potentially life-saving drugs to patients being treated for sepsis in the emergency room.
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